I have a PHP Script that creates a folder based on a form. I'm wondering if there is a way to NOt create and replace that folder if it already exists?
<?php
mkdir("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]");
?>
I have a PHP Script that creates a folder based on a form. I'm wondering if there is a way to NOt create and replace that folder if it already exists?
<?php
mkdir("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]");
?>
You can use is_dir:
<?php
$path = "QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]";
if(!is_dir($path)){
mkdir($path);
}
?>
In general:
$dirname = "whatever";
if (!is_dir($dirname)) {
mkdir($dirname);
}
In particular: be very careful when doing filesystem (or any other type of sensitive) operations that involve user input! The current example (create a directory) doesn't leave much of an open attack surface, but validating the input can never hurt.
Use is_dir to check if folder exists
$dir = "/my/path/to/dir";
if (!is_dir($dir)) {
if (false === @mkdir($dir, 0777, true)) {
throw new \RuntimeException(sprintf('Unable to create the %s directory', $dir));
}
}
Attention to the uncontrolled input, it is very dangerous!
You can try:
<?php
if (!is_dir("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]"))
mkdir("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]");
?>
Use the is_dir-function of PHP to check if there is already a directory and call the mkdir-function only if there isn't one.
Do some validation rules (regexp) here before using POST variable to create the directory !
if(!file_exists("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]"))
mkdir("QuickLinks/$_POST[contractno]");
is_dir
sounds like the more exact approach, but can lead to false negatives and additional errors. Purely fictional. But the fallback code should be invoked for existing files and directories.